- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Monday, 14 July 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 21 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive how many people died after contracting clostridium difficile in each year since 1997, broken down by NHS board.
Answer
I refer the member to the answer to question S3W-14693 on 21 July 2008. All answers to written parliamentary questions are available on the Parliament’s website, the search facility for which can be found at .
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 18 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 10 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive how many examples of “leapfrogging” there have been since the introduction of the Agenda for Change pay system, broken down by type of NHS employee.
Answer
The information requested is not held centrally.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 18 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 10 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive what representations it has had in relation to “leapfrogging” resulting from the introduction of the Agenda for Change pay system, and from whom.
Answer
Representations in relation to “leapfrogging” have been made by health trades unions at both UK level, in the NHS Staff Council and at Scottish level in the Scottish Pay Reference and Implementation Group. There are no plans, however, to amend the assimilation process currently in place and which is being taken forward in partnership.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 18 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 10 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the answers to questions S3W-13149 and S3W-13150 by Nicola Sturgeon on 30 May 2008, what differences there are between Welsh implementation issues and Scottish implementation issues.
Answer
Agenda for Change is a UK-wide agreement and, as such, implementation issues throughout the UK are similar. However, in Wales, concerns were raised with the implementation process being used, particularly around the consistency of application and outcomes. The Welsh review rightly aimed to address a number of these concerns. In Scotland, Agenda for Change has been implemented in full partnership and arrangements have been in place to check consistency of outcomes prior to assimilation since the process began.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 18 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 10 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the answer to question S3W-13147 by Nicola Sturgeon on 30 May 2008, whether it intends to discuss the Welsh response to Agenda for Change with the Welsh Assembly Government with a view to learning lessons that could be applicable to Scotland, and what its position is on the matter.
Answer
Whilst there are no plans to hold specific separate discussions with the Welsh Assembly Government, it is likely that there will be further discussion at UK level on how the findings of the Welsh review impact on the overall UK agreement and I can confirm the Scottish Government will participate in any such discussions and take any steps that are required to ensure Agenda for Change in Scotland is fit for purpose.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 25 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 9 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the answer to question S3W-11764 by Nicola Sturgeon on 22 April 2008, why it does not monitor the scale and severity of hospital-acquired infections on a hospital-by-hospital basis; whether it will start to do so and, if so, when.
Answer
Monitoring infection rates at local level, for example by ward, clinical specialty or hospital, is the responsibility of each NHS board.
The independent review of the Vale of Leven hospital will examine the adequacy of local systems and practices that were in place there. The recommendations to be made by the review team may have implications for local systems and practices that operate elsewhere.
A range of national mandatory healthcare associated infection surveillance systems are in place to assist NHS boards in this exercise and all NHS boards are required to follow the NHS Quality Improvement Scotland Healthcare Associated Infection standards and the NHS Scotland Code of Practice. Cases of outbreaks of infections are reported to Health Protection Scotland who provide expert support, advice and guidance.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 25 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 8 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive what caused the outbreaks of clostridium difficile at the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow in October 2007 and June 2008 and how many patients contracted the disease in each case.
Answer
The cause of the outbreak in October 2007 could not be determined. The Outbreak Control team is currently reviewing the circumstances of the most recent outbreak at the Victoria Infirmary and a full report will be compiled. Six patients were affected in October 2007 and I understand that a further five patients were affected in the most recent outbreak, one of whom died on 24 June 2008. We are advised by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde that clostridium difficile was a contributory factor in the patient''s death.
The following is the original answer (published on 8 July 2008); see below
The cause of the outbreak in October 2007 could not be determined. The Outbreak Control team is currently reviewing the circumstances of the most recent outbreak at the Victoria Infirmary and a full report will be compiled. Six patients were affected in October 2007 and I understand that a further six patients were affected in the most recent outbreak, one of whom died on 24 June 2008. We are advised by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde that clostridium difficile was a contributory factor in the patient''s death.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 25 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 4 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the outbreak of clostridium difficile at the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow in October 2007, what steps were taken to prevent a fresh outbreak.
Answer
The clostridium difficile outbreak in October 2007 was managed by the local Outbreak Control Team who isolated the six patients affected in a temporary cohort isolation facility. In dealing with this outbreak, the board followed the procedures set out in Annex 4 of the 2003 guidance document Managing Incidents Presenting Actual or Potential Risks to the Public Health: Guidance on the Roles and Responsibilities of Incident Control Teams, which can be accessed at:
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As a consequence of this outbreak, I am advised that NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde put a range of actions in place and ordered a deep clean of affected ward areas, implemented its rapid response team and put additional resources into surveillance. More generally, all NHS boards must comply at all times with the national cleaning standards, the hand hygiene monitoring, the prudent prescribing of antibiotics procedures, appropriate infection control precautions (e.g. isolation) and rapid accurate diagnosis procedures.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 25 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 4 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executive how many of the 54 patients who contracted clostridium difficile at the Vale of Leven Hospital between December 2007 and June 2008 subsequently died and how many of these deaths were attributed to clostridium difficile.
Answer
Twenty-two patients of the 55 patients we are now aware of have died. Of these, clostridium difficile was recorded on nine death certificates as being the likely underlying cause of death, and was recorded as a possible contributory factor in a further nine deaths.
- Asked by: Jackson Carlaw, MSP for West of Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 25 June 2008
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicola Sturgeon on 4 July 2008
To ask the Scottish Executivewhat plans there are to make it compulsory for hospital visitors to wash their hands with alcohol gel before they are allowed to enter hospital wards.
Answer
The approach taken by the Scottish Government’s Healthcare Associated Infection (HAI) Task Force is to encourage higher standards of hand hygiene by NHS staff, patients, visitors, and members of the public through a range of actions including a national poster campaign in main hospital thoroughfares (these posters are routinely refreshed), the provision of the Chief Nursing Officer and Chief Medical Officer’s five top tips which visitors and patients should be made aware of, the availability of alcohol hand gels at every acute bed and ward area for patients and visitors to routinely use and monitoring of compliance of NHS staff by local hand hygiene co-ordinators against an audit tool produced by Health Protection Scotland. The latest health protection quarterly monitoring report reveals that compliance in Scotland has increased from 68% in the first audit in February 2007 to 88% now.
Alongside the NHS element of the hand hygiene campaign, our national TV and media advertising campaign Germs - Wash Your Hands of Them, which ran for six weeks in early 2007 and again in early 2008, carried the clear message to the general public that regular hand hygiene will help them avoid catching and spreading infections. To get the message across to young children and their families, we issued hand hygiene information packs and a DVD to all primary schools and nurseries in Scotland in September last year. On a local level, it is for each infection control team at NHS boards to decide how their visitors are best encouraged to wash their hands and make use of the alcohol hand gels.